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Money Matters - Questions From Listeners: How Much Should We Spend On Christmas

BOSTON (CBS) - How much should you spend on Christmas? I really don't know. It depends on so many things. Your current income, debt level and the desire to gift.

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USA Today had a Christmas budget they put together several years ago and I kept the article. Total for a 9 foot Douglas fir tree with the trimmings, gifts for family and friends, fancy food, cards, stamps, wrapping paper and bows, party clothes, tickets to the Nutcracker, babysitting and a new snowman cookie jar was close to $5,000 ($4,906).

That's a lot of money! More than I plan to spend on Christmas even with a granddaughter to shop for.

How much can you afford to spend on Christmas? Review your budget. If you are struggling and are already in a negative cash flow situation which means you are spending more than you are earning you really need to reevaluate holiday spending. Spend as little as you can get away with.

If you are living paycheck to paycheck meaning there is nothing leftover each week do you want to go into debt for Christmas? Many folks are still paying off Christmas the following July.

But what if you have little kids? They don't understand, nor can they really comprehend your need to budget. What can you do to make it happen for them?

For starters no one else but the kids get anything for Christmas. Try shopping on Craig's List. The Goodwill or the Salvation Army stores also have toys to buy, some new, others slightly used. Little kids don't need a lot to make them happy.

Will the grandparents be buying the kids gifts? How about aunts or uncles? Share the kids' wish list with them.

Consider the gift of time. I've talked about this before. Give a gift certificate, a promise, an IOU for what you will do in the future. Create a coupon book. Some examples; snow shoveling, lawn mowing, back rubs, gardening, dinner by candle light, brownies, fudge.

Next fall start looking around for things that can be used for Christmas gifts. Especially for kids under 5. You can throw those plastic toys in the dishwasher or wash them in the bath tub and they look brand new.

You can have a wonderful holiday without breaking the bank. Christmas and Hanukkah are about the children and being with the people you love!

One more thing: When we moved into our first house on Thanksgiving many years ago we had very few dollars left over for Christmas. But we had a little girl who believed in the magic of Christmas. My husband made her a play stove from the leftover plywood and I painted it white and the burners black. He made her some shelves and I collected food boxes and we made her a grocery store. Our only purchase was a toy cash register.

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